Weekend Plans Post: Stranger Things Season The Third

Jaybird

Jaybird is Birdmojo on Xbox Live and Jaybirdmojo on Playstation's network. He's been playing consoles since the Atari 2600 and it was Zork that taught him how to touch-type. If you've got a song for Wednesday, a commercial for Saturday, a recommendation for Tuesday, an essay for Monday, or, heck, just a handful a questions, fire off an email to AskJaybird-at-gmail.com

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14 Responses

  1. Ben Sears says:

    I haven’t seen past season 1, but your description of a mall has me hankering for an Orange Julius. I also suddenly want to reclaim my D&D books (I still prefer 3.5) from my son’s room. He plays online with a group out of Oakland. I’m jealous.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Ben Sears says:

      I was almost surprised at how much I enjoyed Season 2. “Holy cow. This is still good!”, I thought.

      Season 3 has a *ROUGH* start. The first episode kinda sucks. Same for episodes 2-3. Somewhere around episode 4, it stops sucking. Somewhere around episode 5, it starts being as good as the previous seasons and it finishes strong.

      Yes. I was surprised at how much of an emotional response I got from something as simple as a shot of a crowded mall. A pang.Report

      • DensityDuck in reply to Jaybird says:

        Season 3 felt like a different show than the other ones. It was leaning hard into the nostalgia thing, both in setting and in plot (and, one might suggest, in the very idea of a long-running horror-movie series taking a sci-fi turn in a later installment.)Report

  2. fillyjonk says:

    I didn’t grow up close enough to a mall to be able to be a mall rat, but I still miss malls. The nearest true mall (I think of the enclosed malls as “true” malls; there were a few more strip-mall type places closer to us) was Chapel Hill Mall which was like in Cuyahoga Falls (Wikipedia says Akron. It also says it’s permanently closed, which I guess I knew but had blocked from my memory). It was where we went for back-to-school shopping; there was a Stride-Rite shoe store that had a scale model tugboat dominating much of the store (that you were allowed to climb and run around on, a sneaky way of getting kids to try out their new shoes for feel). And several chain type anchor stores.

    There was also a Woolworth’s, with a lunch counter. I remember often getting a grilled cheese and a chocolate milkshake there when I was at the mall. And there was a movie theater, it was where I saw E.T. and Goonies and other movies as a kid/teen.

    I admit I miss enclosed malls. I know all the reasons they died – hard to heat or cool that much dead space, and expensive; some people didn’t like the roving groups of kids that hung out there; retail has changed. Where I live now we don’t really have shopping – you have to drive at least a half hour for much of anything other than wal-mart – and the “malls” that have the desirable stores are the strip mall type (or whatever they call the new incarnation of strip malls). There is an enclosed mall but last I heard they had shut off the heating and air conditioning, and all the anchor stores had left.

    I didn’t realize it when I was a teen that the few times I got to go to a mall and hang out with my friends I was experiencing a “third place,” which is now apparently an endangered species in modern America….at least, I don’t seem to have “third places” where I live now.Report

    • Fish in reply to fillyjonk says:

      I, too, grew up far from a proper mall, so most of my nostalgic mall memories come from being stationed in Omaha, Nebraska as a baby airman. Omaha had three malls: Southroads (which was technically in Bellevue and was TINY), Crossroads, which sat at the intersection of Dodge and 72nd and was The Place To Be, and Westroads, which as the name implies was waaaaaaaay out on the west end of the city in a burb who’s name escapes me right now. It opened shortly before the Air Force moved me to England so I most of my memories of that place revolve around it being really upscale.Report

      • Michael Cain in reply to Fish says:

        Last time I visited my remaining family in the Omaha area, Omaha goes on for miles and miles beyond Westroads now. In fact, one of their advertising points is “only 10 minutes from downtown”. Not sure if it was ever in a different city — there was quite a bit of unincorporated Douglas County in those days. But since the only restriction on Omaha’s ability to annex is that it can’t cross the Douglas County lines, Westroads has been inside Omaha for a long time now.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to fillyjonk says:

      There’s the mall you go to as a kid. “Can we go into Waldenbooks?” “No.”

      Then, when you have a car, there’s the mall you go to as a teenager. Like the tagline to Mallrats said: “They’re not there to shop. They’re not there to work. They’re just there.”

      Play video games with friends. Get a slice from Sbarro and a Julius to wash it down.

      Now? The mall just sucks. (I wonder how difficult it would be to turn it into low-income housing. Or, in the case of the one on North Academy, luxury housing.)Report

      • InMD in reply to Jaybird says:

        The mall I went to growing up has been demolished for luxury apartments and an upscale storefront shopping center. It had already declined significantly by the time I was in high school due to newer, bigger, nicer malls that had opened up in proximity. In its final years I don’t think there was anything in it but a Burlington Coat Factory, a food court, and a few little stands selling junk in the concourse. Definitely a far cry from the place that once hosted a Babbages, a pretty good arcade, and other attractions of my youth.Report

        • Jaybird in reply to InMD says:

          Part of me wants to go to The Citadel and run around and check out what’s still there and what’s gone.

          The Hooters sign still lights up after sundown so I assume that that’s still there. But inside? It used to have comic book stores and a Gamestop and an arcade and a candy store that sold those Smarties double lollies.

          But I haven’t been in there since 2017, I guess. Maybe 2016.Report

      • fillyjonk in reply to Jaybird says:

        mall can’t suck as bad as wal-mart on a before-a-holiday Friday afternoon. Also most malls had a “dressier” clothing store and a “more affordable” clothing store, wal-mart here just has one level.

        I didn’t have a driver’s license until I was 18, then I went to college and didn’t have a car (parking was almost as bad as rent!) so I didn’t get the late-teens mall experience.Report

  3. Fish says:

    Maya Hawke also has two albums out. I’m told her musical stylings are classified as “folk rock.”Report

  4. Janky Lass says:

    Warning: the last episode of Stranger Things, Season 4, is the longest TV episode ever.
    Longer than the longest state-run television episode (from Turkey, oddly enough).

    Stranger Things’ advertising budget went negative (that is to say, that Shibuya cafe is turning a profit — and has a 7 day waiting list).

    You wouldn’t think a blockbuster like Stranger Things would have to pinch pennies, but then they go throwing in The Neverending Story (which Germany paid them for)…Report